Helen Mirren is one of the funniest actresses around, and Helen Mirren with helium is even better The Oscar winner stopped by The Tonight Show Monday night to shoot the breeze and inhale some helium with Jimmy Fallon "I haven't done this since I was about 11," Mirren said before taking a gulp from the helium balloon to answer Fallon's questions about where she keeps her Oscar, what a certain British dish made of sausage and potatoes is called.

In "Pimento," the ninth episode in Better Call Saul's first season, we learn that the source of Jimmy McGill's professional strife actually resides far, far too close to home, and that Mike's savviness in the criminal realm is not to be messed with.

It's hard to believe, but rock legend Eric Clapton turns 70 on Monday To celebrate his impressive career, we put together a Music Monday playlist full of his greatest hits — one for every year of his amazing life so far.

JOSHUA TREE, CALIFORNIA — "Come on, you damn fire, I wrote a song for you," Zedd, the Grammy-winning "Clarity" DJ, yelled while staring at a giant wooden Z that was just set ablaze in the middle of the Mojave Desert on Saturday night.

There will be no Wells Fargo wagon comin' down the street this year After announcing last year that it had secured the rights to The Music Man, NBC has instead chosen to make The Wiz its next live musical effort, the network announced Monday.

Just a few months into his job as a contributor to Comedy Central's The Daily Show, Trevor Noah on Monday received a huge promotion that will put him into one of the most high-profile seats on television.

Throw out your N64!* You can now play a way better version of Super Mario 64. Game designer and blogger Erik Ross has created a fully playable, high-definition version of the iconic first level from Super Mario 64.

"One last ride," Vin Diesel says without irony in Furious 7, which is a bald-faced lie because we know Universal Pictures is going to cause at least three or four more of these atrocious car wrecks, each one cornier and more stupefyingly preposterous than the last.

Sony's music streaming service, Music Unlimited, never managed to gain traction. So in January, the company announced that it would partner with Spotify for a new service called PlayStation Music, which officially replaced Music Unlimited on Monday The new service, which is available for PlayStations 3 and 4, went live in 41 countries, including the U.S., UK, Turkey, Ireland, Italy, France, Germany, Australia, Brazil and Mexico.